3rd Edition: Chapter 4 - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 145
About This Presentation
Title:

3rd Edition: Chapter 4

Description:

Chapter 4 Network Layer Network Layer 4-* – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:211
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 146
Provided by: JimKuro50
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: 3rd Edition: Chapter 4


1
Chapter 4Network Layer
2
Chapter 4 Network Layer
  • Chapter goals
  • understand principles behind network layer
    services
  • network layer service models
  • forwarding versus routing
  • how a router works
  • routing (path selection)
  • dealing with scale
  • advanced topics IPv6, mobility
  • instantiation, implementation in the Internet

3
Chapter 4 Network Layer
  • 4. 1 Introduction
  • 4.2 Virtual circuit and datagram networks
  • 4.3 Whats inside a router
  • 4.4 IP Internet Protocol
  • Datagram format
  • IPv4 addressing
  • ICMP
  • IPv6
  • 4.5 Routing algorithms
  • Link state
  • Distance Vector
  • Hierarchical routing
  • 4.6 Routing in the Internet
  • RIP
  • OSPF
  • BGP
  • 4.7 Broadcast and multicast routing

4
Network layer
  • transport segment from sending to receiving host
  • on sending side encapsulates segments into
    datagrams
  • on rcving side, delivers segments to transport
    layer
  • network layer protocols in every host, router
  • router examines header fields in all IP datagrams
    passing through it

5
Two Key Network-Layer Functions
  • analogy
  • routing process of planning trip from source to
    dest
  • forwarding process of getting through single
    interchange
  • forwarding move packets from routers input to
    appropriate router output
  • routing determine route taken by packets from
    source to dest.
  • routing algorithms

6
Interplay between routing and forwarding
7
Connection setup
  • 3rd important function in some network
    architectures
  • ATM, frame relay, X.25
  • before datagrams flow, two end hosts and
    intervening routers establish virtual connection
  • routers get involved
  • network vs transport layer connection service
  • network between two hosts (may also involve
    intervening routers in case of VCs)
  • transport between two processes

8
Network service model
Q What service model for channel transporting
datagrams from sender to receiver?
  • Example services for a flow of datagrams
  • in-order datagram delivery
  • guaranteed minimum bandwidth to flow
  • restrictions on changes in inter-packet spacing
  • Example services for individual datagrams
  • guaranteed delivery
  • guaranteed delivery with less than 40 msec delay

9
Network layer service models
Guarantees ?
Network Architecture Internet ATM ATM ATM ATM
Service Model best effort CBR VBR ABR UBR
Congestion feedback no (inferred via
loss) no congestion no congestion yes no
Bandwidth none constant rate guaranteed rate gua
ranteed minimum none
Loss no yes yes no no
Order no yes yes yes yes
Timing no yes yes no no
10
Chapter 4 Network Layer
  • 4. 1 Introduction
  • 4.2 Virtual circuit and datagram networks
  • 4.3 Whats inside a router
  • 4.4 IP Internet Protocol
  • Datagram format
  • IPv4 addressing
  • ICMP
  • IPv6
  • 4.5 Routing algorithms
  • Link state
  • Distance Vector
  • Hierarchical routing
  • 4.6 Routing in the Internet
  • RIP
  • OSPF
  • BGP
  • 4.7 Broadcast and multicast routing

11
Network layer connection and connection-less
service
  • datagram network provides network-layer
    connectionless service
  • VC network provides network-layer connection
    service
  • analogous to the transport-layer services, but
  • service host-to-host
  • no choice network provides one or the other
  • implementation in network core

12
Virtual circuits
  • source-to-dest path behaves much like telephone
    circuit
  • performance-wise
  • network actions along source-to-dest path
  • call setup, teardown for each call before data
    can flow
  • each packet carries VC identifier (not
    destination host address)
  • every router on source-dest path maintains
    state for each passing connection
  • link, router resources (bandwidth, buffers) may
    be allocated to VC (dedicated resources
    predictable service)

13
VC implementation
  • a VC consists of
  • path from source to destination
  • VC numbers, one number for each link along path
  • entries in forwarding tables in routers along
    path
  • packet belonging to VC carries VC number (rather
    than dest address)
  • VC number can be changed on each link.
  • New VC number comes from forwarding table

14
Forwarding table
Forwarding table in northwest router
Routers maintain connection state information!
15
Virtual circuits signaling protocols
  • used to setup, maintain teardown VC
  • used in ATM, frame-relay, X.25
  • not used in todays Internet

6. Receive data
5. Data flow begins
4. Call connected
3. Accept call
1. Initiate call
2. incoming call
16
Datagram networks
  • no call setup at network layer
  • routers no state about end-to-end connections
  • no network-level concept of connection
  • packets forwarded using destination host address
  • packets between same source-dest pair may take
    different paths

1. Send data
2. Receive data
17
Forwarding table
4 billion possible entries
Destination Address Range
Link
Interface 11001000 00010111 00010000
00000000
through
0 11001000
00010111 00010111 11111111 11001000
00010111 00011000 00000000
through
1
11001000 00010111 00011000 11111111
11001000 00010111 00011001 00000000
through

2 11001000 00010111 00011111 11111111
otherwise

3
18
Longest prefix matching
Prefix Match
Link Interface
11001000 00010111 00010
0 11001000 00010111
00011000 1
11001000 00010111 00011
2
otherwise
3
Examples
Which interface?
DA 11001000 00010111 00010110 10100001
Which interface?
DA 11001000 00010111 00011000 10101010
19
Datagram or VC network why?
  • Internet (datagram)
  • data exchange among computers
  • elastic service, no strict timing req.
  • smart end systems (computers)
  • can adapt, perform control, error recovery
  • simple inside network, complexity at edge
  • many link types
  • different characteristics
  • uniform service difficult
  • ATM (VC)
  • evolved from telephony
  • human conversation
  • strict timing, reliability requirements
  • need for guaranteed service
  • dumb end systems
  • telephones
  • complexity inside network

20
Chapter 4 Network Layer
  • 4. 1 Introduction
  • 4.2 Virtual circuit and datagram networks
  • 4.3 Whats inside a router
  • 4.4 IP Internet Protocol
  • Datagram format
  • IPv4 addressing
  • ICMP
  • IPv6
  • 4.5 Routing algorithms
  • Link state
  • Distance Vector
  • Hierarchical routing
  • 4.6 Routing in the Internet
  • RIP
  • OSPF
  • BGP
  • 4.7 Broadcast and multicast routing

21
Router Architecture Overview
  • Two key router functions
  • run routing algorithms/protocol (RIP, OSPF, BGP)
  • forwarding datagrams from incoming to outgoing
    link

22
Input Port Functions
Physical layer bit-level reception
  • Decentralized switching
  • given datagram dest., lookup output port using
    forwarding table in input port memory
  • goal complete input port processing at line
    speed
  • queuing if datagrams arrive faster than
    forwarding rate into switch fabric

Data link layer e.g., Ethernet see chapter 5
23
Three types of switching fabrics
24
Switching Via Memory
  • First generation routers
  • traditional computers with switching under
    direct control of CPU
  • packet copied to systems memory
  • speed limited by memory bandwidth (2 bus
    crossings per datagram)

25
Switching Via a Bus
  • datagram from input port memory
  • to output port memory via a shared bus
  • bus contention switching speed limited by bus
    bandwidth
  • 32 Gbps bus, Cisco 5600 sufficient speed for
    access and enterprise routers

26
Switching Via An Interconnection Network
  • overcome bus bandwidth limitations
  • Banyan networks, other interconnection nets
    initially developed to connect processors in
    multiprocessor
  • advanced design fragmenting datagram into fixed
    length cells, switch cells through the fabric.
  • Cisco 12000 switches 60 Gbps through the
    interconnection network

27
Output Ports
  • Buffering required when datagrams arrive from
    fabric faster than the transmission rate
  • Scheduling discipline chooses among queued
    datagrams for transmission

28
Output port queueing
  • buffering when arrival rate via switch exceeds
    output line speed
  • queueing (delay) and loss due to output port
    buffer overflow!

29
How much buffering?
  • RFC 3439 rule of thumb average buffering equal
    to typical RTT (say 250 msec) times link
    capacity C
  • e.g., C 10 Gps link 2.5 Gbit buffer
  • Recent recommendation with N flows, buffering
    equal to

30
Input Port Queuing
  • Fabric slower than input ports combined -gt
    queueing may occur at input queues
  • Head-of-the-Line (HOL) blocking queued datagram
    at front of queue prevents others in queue from
    moving forward
  • queueing delay and loss due to input buffer
    overflow!

31
Chapter 4 Network Layer
  • 4. 1 Introduction
  • 4.2 Virtual circuit and datagram networks
  • 4.3 Whats inside a router
  • 4.4 IP Internet Protocol
  • Datagram format
  • IPv4 addressing
  • ICMP
  • IPv6
  • 4.5 Routing algorithms
  • Link state
  • Distance Vector
  • Hierarchical routing
  • 4.6 Routing in the Internet
  • RIP
  • OSPF
  • BGP
  • 4.7 Broadcast and multicast routing

32
The Internet Network layer
  • Host, router network layer functions

Transport layer TCP, UDP
Network layer
Link layer
physical layer
33
Chapter 4 Network Layer
  • 4. 1 Introduction
  • 4.2 Virtual circuit and datagram networks
  • 4.3 Whats inside a router
  • 4.4 IP Internet Protocol
  • Datagram format
  • IPv4 addressing
  • ICMP
  • IPv6
  • 4.5 Routing algorithms
  • Link state
  • Distance Vector
  • Hierarchical routing
  • 4.6 Routing in the Internet
  • RIP
  • OSPF
  • BGP
  • 4.7 Broadcast and multicast routing

34
IP datagram format
  • how much overhead with TCP?
  • 20 bytes of TCP
  • 20 bytes of IP
  • 40 bytes app layer overhead

35
IP Fragmentation Reassembly
  • network links have MTU (max.transfer size) -
    largest possible link-level frame.
  • different link types, different MTUs
  • large IP datagram divided (fragmented) within
    net
  • one datagram becomes several datagrams
  • reassembled only at final destination
  • IP header bits used to identify, order related
    fragments

fragmentation in one large datagram out 3
smaller datagrams
reassembly
36
IP Fragmentation and Reassembly
  • Example
  • 4000 byte datagram
  • MTU 1500 bytes

1480 bytes in data field
offset 1480/8
37
Chapter 4 Network Layer
  • 4. 1 Introduction
  • 4.2 Virtual circuit and datagram networks
  • 4.3 Whats inside a router
  • 4.4 IP Internet Protocol
  • Datagram format
  • IPv4 addressing
  • ICMP
  • IPv6
  • 4.5 Routing algorithms
  • Link state
  • Distance Vector
  • Hierarchical routing
  • 4.6 Routing in the Internet
  • RIP
  • OSPF
  • BGP
  • 4.7 Broadcast and multicast routing

38
IP Addressing introduction
223.1.1.1
  • IP address 32-bit identifier for host, router
    interface
  • interface connection between host/router and
    physical link
  • routers typically have multiple interfaces
  • host typically has one interface
  • IP addresses associated with each interface

223.1.2.9
223.1.1.4
223.1.1.3
223.1.1.1 11011111 00000001 00000001 00000001
223
1
1
1
39
Subnets
223.1.1.1
  • IP address
  • subnet part (high order bits)
  • host part (low order bits)
  • Whats a subnet ?
  • device interfaces with same subnet part of IP
    address
  • can physically reach each other without
    intervening router

223.1.2.1
223.1.1.2
223.1.2.9
223.1.1.4
223.1.2.2
223.1.1.3
223.1.3.27
subnet
223.1.3.2
223.1.3.1
network consisting of 3 subnets
40
Subnets
  • Recipe
  • To determine the subnets, detach each interface
    from its host or router, creating islands of
    isolated networks. Each isolated network is
    called a subnet.

Subnet mask /24
41
Subnets
223.1.1.2
  • How many?

223.1.1.1
223.1.1.4
223.1.1.3
223.1.7.0
223.1.9.2
223.1.9.1
223.1.7.1
223.1.8.0
223.1.8.1
223.1.2.6
223.1.3.27
223.1.2.1
223.1.2.2
223.1.3.2
223.1.3.1
42
IP addressing CIDR
  • CIDR Classless InterDomain Routing
  • subnet portion of address of arbitrary length
  • address format a.b.c.d/x, where x is bits in
    subnet portion of address

43
IP addresses how to get one?
  • Q How does a host get IP address?
  • hard-coded by system admin in a file
  • Windows control-panel-gtnetwork-gtconfiguration-gttc
    p/ip-gtproperties
  • UNIX /etc/rc.config
  • DHCP Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol
    dynamically get address from as server
  • plug-and-play

44
DHCP Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol
  • Goal allow host to dynamically obtain its IP
    address from network server when it joins network
  • Can renew its lease on address in use
  • Allows reuse of addresses (only hold address
    while connected an on)
  • Support for mobile users who want to join network
    (more shortly)
  • DHCP overview
  • host broadcasts DHCP discover msg
  • DHCP server responds with DHCP offer msg
  • host requests IP address DHCP request msg
  • DHCP server sends address DHCP ack msg

45
DHCP client-server scenario
223.1.2.1
DHCP

223.1.1.1
server

223.1.1.2
223.1.2.9
223.1.1.4
223.1.2.2
arriving DHCP client needs address in
this network
223.1.1.3
223.1.3.27

223.1.3.2
223.1.3.1

46
DHCP client-server scenario
arriving client
DHCP server 223.1.2.5
DHCP offer
src 223.1.2.5, 67 dest 255.255.255.255,
68 yiaddrr 223.1.2.4 transaction ID
654 Lifetime 3600 secs
DHCP request
src 0.0.0.0, 68 dest 255.255.255.255,
67 yiaddrr 223.1.2.4 transaction ID
655 Lifetime 3600 secs
time
DHCP ACK
src 223.1.2.5, 67 dest 255.255.255.255,
68 yiaddrr 223.1.2.4 transaction ID
655 Lifetime 3600 secs
47
IP addresses how to get one?
  • Q How does network get subnet part of IP addr?
  • A gets allocated portion of its provider ISPs
    address space

ISP's block 11001000 00010111 00010000
00000000 200.23.16.0/20 Organization 0
11001000 00010111 00010000 00000000
200.23.16.0/23 Organization 1 11001000
00010111 00010010 00000000 200.23.18.0/23
Organization 2 11001000 00010111 00010100
00000000 200.23.20.0/23 ...
..
. . Organization 7
11001000 00010111 00011110 00000000
200.23.30.0/23
48
Hierarchical addressing route aggregation
Hierarchical addressing allows efficient
advertisement of routing information
Organization 0
Organization 1
Send me anything with addresses beginning
200.23.16.0/20
Organization 2
Fly-By-Night-ISP
Internet
Organization 7
Send me anything with addresses beginning
199.31.0.0/16
ISPs-R-Us
49
Hierarchical addressing more specific routes
ISPs-R-Us has a more specific route to
Organization 1
Organization 0
Send me anything with addresses beginning
200.23.16.0/20
Organization 2
Fly-By-Night-ISP
Internet
Organization 7
Send me anything with addresses beginning
199.31.0.0/16 or 200.23.18.0/23
ISPs-R-Us
Organization 1
50
IP addressing the last word...
  • Q How does an ISP get block of addresses?
  • A ICANN Internet Corporation for Assigned
  • Names and Numbers
  • allocates addresses
  • manages DNS
  • assigns domain names, resolves disputes

51
NAT Network Address Translation
rest of Internet
local network (e.g., home network) 10.0.0/24
10.0.0.1
10.0.0.4
10.0.0.2
138.76.29.7
10.0.0.3
Datagrams with source or destination in this
network have 10.0.0/24 address for source,
destination (as usual)
All datagrams leaving local network have same
single source NAT IP address 138.76.29.7, differe
nt source port numbers
52
NAT Network Address Translation
  • Motivation local network uses just one IP
    address as far as outside world is concerned
  • range of addresses not needed from ISP just one
    IP address for all devices
  • can change addresses of devices in local network
    without notifying outside world
  • can change ISP without changing addresses of
    devices in local network
  • devices inside local net not explicitly
    addressable, visible by outside world (a security
    plus).

53
NAT Network Address Translation
  • Implementation NAT router must
  • outgoing datagrams replace (source IP address,
    port ) of every outgoing datagram to (NAT IP
    address, new port )
  • . . . remote clients/servers will respond using
    (NAT IP address, new port ) as destination
    addr.
  • remember (in NAT translation table) every (source
    IP address, port ) to (NAT IP address, new port
    ) translation pair
  • incoming datagrams replace (NAT IP address, new
    port ) in dest fields of every incoming datagram
    with corresponding (source IP address, port )
    stored in NAT table

54
NAT Network Address Translation
NAT translation table WAN side addr LAN
side addr
138.76.29.7, 5001 10.0.0.1, 3345

10.0.0.1
10.0.0.4
10.0.0.2
138.76.29.7
10.0.0.3
4 NAT router changes datagram dest addr
from 138.76.29.7, 5001 to 10.0.0.1, 3345
3 Reply arrives dest. address 138.76.29.7,
5001
55
NAT Network Address Translation
  • 16-bit port-number field
  • 60,000 simultaneous connections with a single
    LAN-side address!
  • NAT is controversial
  • routers should only process up to layer 3
  • violates end-to-end argument
  • NAT possibility must be taken into account by app
    designers, eg, P2P applications
  • address shortage should instead be solved by IPv6

56
NAT traversal problem
  • client wants to connect to server with address
    10.0.0.1
  • server address 10.0.0.1 local to LAN (client
    cant use it as destination addr)
  • only one externally visible NATted address
    138.76.29.7
  • solution 1 statically configure NAT to forward
    incoming connection requests at given port to
    server
  • e.g., (123.76.29.7, port 2500) always forwarded
    to 10.0.0.1 port 25000

10.0.0.1
Client
?
10.0.0.4
138.76.29.7
NAT router
57
NAT traversal problem
  • solution 2 Universal Plug and Play (UPnP)
    Internet Gateway Device (IGD) Protocol. Allows
    NATted host to
  • learn public IP address (138.76.29.7)
  • add/remove port mappings (with lease times)
  • i.e., automate static NAT port map configuration

10.0.0.1
IGD
10.0.0.4
138.76.29.7
NAT router
58
NAT traversal problem
  • solution 3 relaying (used in Skype)
  • NATed client establishes connection to relay
  • External client connects to relay
  • relay bridges packets between to connections

2. connection to relay initiated by client
1. connection to relay initiated by NATted host
3. relaying established
Client
138.76.29.7
59
Chapter 4 Network Layer
  • 4. 1 Introduction
  • 4.2 Virtual circuit and datagram networks
  • 4.3 Whats inside a router
  • 4.4 IP Internet Protocol
  • Datagram format
  • IPv4 addressing
  • ICMP
  • IPv6
  • 4.5 Routing algorithms
  • Link state
  • Distance Vector
  • Hierarchical routing
  • 4.6 Routing in the Internet
  • RIP
  • OSPF
  • BGP
  • 4.7 Broadcast and multicast routing

60
ICMP Internet Control Message Protocol
  • used by hosts routers to communicate
    network-level information
  • error reporting unreachable host, network, port,
    protocol
  • echo request/reply (used by ping)
  • network-layer above IP
  • ICMP msgs carried in IP datagrams
  • ICMP message type, code plus first 8 bytes of IP
    datagram causing error

Type Code description 0 0 echo
reply (ping) 3 0 dest. network
unreachable 3 1 dest host
unreachable 3 2 dest protocol
unreachable 3 3 dest port
unreachable 3 6 dest network
unknown 3 7 dest host unknown 4
0 source quench (congestion
control - not used) 8 0
echo request (ping) 9 0 route
advertisement 10 0 router
discovery 11 0 TTL expired 12 0
bad IP header
61
Traceroute and ICMP
  • Source sends series of UDP segments to dest
  • First has TTL 1
  • Second has TTL2, etc.
  • Unlikely port number
  • When nth datagram arrives to nth router
  • Router discards datagram
  • And sends to source an ICMP message (type 11,
    code 0)
  • Message includes name of router IP address
  • When ICMP message arrives, source calculates RTT
  • Traceroute does this 3 times
  • Stopping criterion
  • UDP segment eventually arrives at destination
    host
  • Destination returns ICMP host unreachable
    packet (type 3, code 3)
  • When source gets this ICMP, stops.

62
Chapter 4 Network Layer
  • 4. 1 Introduction
  • 4.2 Virtual circuit and datagram networks
  • 4.3 Whats inside a router
  • 4.4 IP Internet Protocol
  • Datagram format
  • IPv4 addressing
  • ICMP
  • IPv6
  • 4.5 Routing algorithms
  • Link state
  • Distance Vector
  • Hierarchical routing
  • 4.6 Routing in the Internet
  • RIP
  • OSPF
  • BGP
  • 4.7 Broadcast and multicast routing

63
IPv6
  • Initial motivation 32-bit address space soon to
    be completely allocated.
  • Additional motivation
  • header format helps speed processing/forwarding
  • header changes to facilitate QoS
  • IPv6 datagram format
  • fixed-length 40 byte header
  • no fragmentation allowed

64
IPv6 Header (Cont)
Priority identify priority among datagrams in
flow Flow Label identify datagrams in same
flow. (concept offlow
not well defined). Next header identify upper
layer protocol for data
65
Other Changes from IPv4
  • Checksum removed entirely to reduce processing
    time at each hop
  • Options allowed, but outside of header,
    indicated by Next Header field
  • ICMPv6 new version of ICMP
  • additional message types, e.g. Packet Too Big
  • multicast group management functions

66
Transition From IPv4 To IPv6
  • Not all routers can be upgraded simultaneous
  • no flag days
  • How will the network operate with mixed IPv4 and
    IPv6 routers?
  • Tunneling IPv6 carried as payload in IPv4
    datagram among IPv4 routers

67
Tunneling
68
Tunneling
tunnel
Logical view
IPv6
IPv6
IPv6
IPv6
Physical view
IPv6
IPv6
IPv6
IPv6
IPv4
IPv4
A-to-B IPv6
E-to-F IPv6
B-to-C IPv6 inside IPv4
B-to-C IPv6 inside IPv4
69
Chapter 4 Network Layer
  • 4. 1 Introduction
  • 4.2 Virtual circuit and datagram networks
  • 4.3 Whats inside a router
  • 4.4 IP Internet Protocol
  • Datagram format
  • IPv4 addressing
  • ICMP
  • IPv6
  • 4.5 Routing algorithms
  • Link state
  • Distance Vector
  • Hierarchical routing
  • 4.6 Routing in the Internet
  • RIP
  • OSPF
  • BGP
  • 4.7 Broadcast and multicast routing

70
Interplay between routing, forwarding
71
Graph abstraction
Graph G (N,E) N set of routers u, v, w,
x, y, z E set of links (u,v), (u,x),
(v,x), (v,w), (x,w), (x,y), (w,y), (w,z), (y,z)
Remark Graph abstraction is useful in other
network contexts Example P2P, where N is set of
peers and E is set of TCP connections
72
Graph abstraction costs
  • c(x,x) cost of link (x,x)
  • - e.g., c(w,z) 5
  • cost could always be 1, or
  • inversely related to bandwidth,
  • or inversely related to
  • congestion

Cost of path (x1, x2, x3,, xp) c(x1,x2)
c(x2,x3) c(xp-1,xp)
Question Whats the least-cost path between u
and z ?
Routing algorithm algorithm that finds
least-cost path
73
Routing Algorithm classification
  • Global or decentralized information?
  • Global
  • all routers have complete topology, link cost
    info
  • link state algorithms
  • Decentralized
  • router knows physically-connected neighbors, link
    costs to neighbors
  • iterative process of computation, exchange of
    info with neighbors
  • distance vector algorithms
  • Static or dynamic?
  • Static
  • routes change slowly over time
  • Dynamic
  • routes change more quickly
  • periodic update
  • in response to link cost changes

74
Chapter 4 Network Layer
  • 4. 1 Introduction
  • 4.2 Virtual circuit and datagram networks
  • 4.3 Whats inside a router
  • 4.4 IP Internet Protocol
  • Datagram format
  • IPv4 addressing
  • ICMP
  • IPv6
  • 4.5 Routing algorithms
  • Link state
  • Distance Vector
  • Hierarchical routing
  • 4.6 Routing in the Internet
  • RIP
  • OSPF
  • BGP
  • 4.7 Broadcast and multicast routing

75
A Link-State Routing Algorithm
  • Dijkstras algorithm
  • net topology, link costs known to all nodes
  • accomplished via link state broadcast
  • all nodes have same info
  • computes least cost paths from one node
    (source) to all other nodes
  • gives forwarding table for that node
  • iterative after k iterations, know least cost
    path to k dest.s
  • Notation
  • c(x,y) link cost from node x to y 8 if not
    direct neighbors
  • D(v) current value of cost of path from source
    to dest. v
  • p(v) predecessor node along path from source to
    v
  • N' set of nodes whose least cost path
    definitively known

76
Dijsktras Algorithm
1 Initialization 2 N' u 3 for all
nodes v 4 if v adjacent to u 5
then D(v) c(u,v) 6 else D(v) 8 7 8
Loop 9 find w not in N' such that D(w) is a
minimum 10 add w to N' 11 update D(v) for
all v adjacent to w and not in N' 12
D(v) min( D(v), D(w) c(w,v) ) 13 / new
cost to v is either old cost to v or known 14
shortest path cost to w plus cost from w to v /
15 until all nodes in N'
77
Dijkstras algorithm example
D(v),p(v) 2,u 2,u 2,u
D(x),p(x) 1,u
Step 0 1 2 3 4 5
D(w),p(w) 5,u 4,x 3,y 3,y
D(y),p(y) 8 2,x
N' u ux uxy uxyv uxyvw uxyvwz
D(z),p(z) 8 8 4,y 4,y 4,y
78
Dijkstras algorithm example (2)
Resulting shortest-path tree from u
Resulting forwarding table in u
79
Dijkstras algorithm, discussion
  • Algorithm complexity n nodes
  • each iteration need to check all nodes, w, not
    in N
  • n(n1)/2 comparisons O(n2)
  • more efficient implementations possible O(nlogn)
  • Oscillations possible
  • e.g., link cost amount of carried traffic

80
Chapter 4 Network Layer
  • 4. 1 Introduction
  • 4.2 Virtual circuit and datagram networks
  • 4.3 Whats inside a router
  • 4.4 IP Internet Protocol
  • Datagram format
  • IPv4 addressing
  • ICMP
  • IPv6
  • 4.5 Routing algorithms
  • Link state
  • Distance Vector
  • Hierarchical routing
  • 4.6 Routing in the Internet
  • RIP
  • OSPF
  • BGP
  • 4.7 Broadcast and multicast routing

81
Distance Vector Algorithm
  • Bellman-Ford Equation (dynamic programming)
  • Define
  • dx(y) cost of least-cost path from x to y
  • Then
  • dx(y) min c(x,v) dv(y)
  • where min is taken over all neighbors v of x

v
82
Bellman-Ford example
Clearly, dv(z) 5, dx(z) 3, dw(z) 3
B-F equation says
du(z) min c(u,v) dv(z),
c(u,x) dx(z), c(u,w)
dw(z) min 2 5,
1 3, 5 3 4
Node that achieves minimum is next hop in
shortest path ? forwarding table
83
Distance Vector Algorithm
  • Dx(y) estimate of least cost from x to y
  • Node x knows cost to each neighbor v c(x,v)
  • Node x maintains distance vector Dx Dx(y) y
    ? N
  • Node x also maintains its neighbors distance
    vectors
  • For each neighbor v, x maintains Dv Dv(y) y
    ? N

84
Distance vector algorithm (4)
  • Basic idea
  • From time-to-time, each node sends its own
    distance vector estimate to neighbors
  • Asynchronous
  • When a node x receives new DV estimate from
    neighbor, it updates its own DV using B-F
    equation

Dx(y) ? minvc(x,v) Dv(y) for each node y ?
N
  • Under minor, natural conditions, the estimate
    Dx(y) converge to the actual least cost dx(y)

85
Distance Vector Algorithm (5)
  • Iterative, asynchronous each local iteration
    caused by
  • local link cost change
  • DV update message from neighbor
  • Distributed
  • each node notifies neighbors only when its DV
    changes
  • neighbors then notify their neighbors if necessary

Each node
86
Dx(z) minc(x,y) Dy(z), c(x,z)
Dz(z) min21 , 70 3
Dx(y) minc(x,y) Dy(y), c(x,z) Dz(y)
min20 , 71 2
node x table
cost to
x y z
x
0
3
2
y
from
2 0 1
z
7 1 0
node y table
cost to
x y z
x
8
8
8 2 0 1
y
from
z
8
8
8
node z table
cost to
x y z
x
8 8 8
y
from
8
8
8
z
7
1
0
time
87
Dx(z) minc(x,y) Dy(z), c(x,z)
Dz(z) min21 , 70 3
Dx(y) minc(x,y) Dy(y), c(x,z) Dz(y)
min20 , 71 2
node x table
cost to
cost to
x y z
x y z
x
0 2 3
x
0 2 3
y
from
2 0 1
y
from
2 0 1
z
7 1 0
z
3 1 0
node y table
cost to
cost to
cost to
x y z
x y z
x y z
x
8
8
x
0 2 7
x
0 2 3
8 2 0 1
y
y
from
y
2 0 1
from
from
2 0 1
z
z
8
8
8
z
7 1 0
3 1 0
node z table
cost to
cost to
cost to
x y z
x y z
x y z
x
0 2 3
x
0 2 7
x
8 8 8
y
y
2 0 1
from
from
y
2 0 1
from
8
8
8
z
z
z
3 1 0
3 1 0
7
1
0
time
88
Distance Vector link cost changes
  • Link cost changes
  • node detects local link cost change
  • updates routing info, recalculates distance
    vector
  • if DV changes, notify neighbors

At time t0, y detects the link-cost change,
updates its DV, and informs its neighbors.
good news travels fast
At time t1, z receives the update from y and
updates its table. It computes a new least cost
to x and sends its neighbors its DV.
At time t2, y receives zs update and updates its
distance table. ys least costs do not change
and hence y does not send any message to z.
89
Distance Vector link cost changes
  • Link cost changes
  • good news travels fast
  • bad news travels slow - count to infinity
    problem!
  • 44 iterations before algorithm stabilizes see
    text
  • Poisoned reverse
  • If Z routes through Y to get to X
  • Z tells Y its (Zs) distance to X is infinite (so
    Y wont route to X via Z)
  • will this completely solve count to infinity
    problem?

90
Comparison of LS and DV algorithms
  • Message complexity
  • LS with n nodes, E links, O(nE) msgs sent
  • DV exchange between neighbors only
  • convergence time varies
  • Speed of Convergence
  • LS O(n2) algorithm requires O(nE) msgs
  • may have oscillations
  • DV convergence time varies
  • may be routing loops
  • count-to-infinity problem
  • Robustness what happens if router malfunctions?
  • LS
  • node can advertise incorrect link cost
  • each node computes only its own table
  • DV
  • DV node can advertise incorrect path cost
  • each nodes table used by others
  • error propagate thru network

91
Chapter 4 Network Layer
  • 4. 1 Introduction
  • 4.2 Virtual circuit and datagram networks
  • 4.3 Whats inside a router
  • 4.4 IP Internet Protocol
  • Datagram format
  • IPv4 addressing
  • ICMP
  • IPv6
  • 4.5 Routing algorithms
  • Link state
  • Distance Vector
  • Hierarchical routing
  • 4.6 Routing in the Internet
  • RIP
  • OSPF
  • BGP
  • 4.7 Broadcast and multicast routing

92
Hierarchical Routing
  • Our routing study thus far - idealization
  • all routers identical
  • network flat
  • not true in practice
  • scale with 200 million destinations
  • cant store all dests in routing tables!
  • routing table exchange would swamp links!
  • administrative autonomy
  • internet network of networks
  • each network admin may want to control routing in
    its own network

93
Hierarchical Routing
  • aggregate routers into regions, autonomous
    systems (AS)
  • routers in same AS run same routing protocol
  • intra-AS routing protocol
  • routers in different AS can run different
    intra-AS routing protocol
  • Gateway router
  • Direct link to router in another AS

94
Interconnected ASes
  • forwarding table configured by both intra- and
    inter-AS routing algorithm
  • intra-AS sets entries for internal dests
  • inter-AS intra-As sets entries for external
    dests

95
Inter-AS tasks
  • AS1 must
  • learn which dests are reachable through AS2,
    which through AS3
  • propagate this reachability info to all routers
    in AS1
  • Job of inter-AS routing!
  • suppose router in AS1 receives datagram destined
    outside of AS1
  • router should forward packet to gateway router,
    but which one?

96
Example Setting forwarding table in router 1d
  • suppose AS1 learns (via inter-AS protocol) that
    subnet x reachable via AS3 (gateway 1c) but not
    via AS2.
  • inter-AS protocol propagates reachability info to
    all internal routers.
  • router 1d determines from intra-AS routing info
    that its interface I is on the least cost path
    to 1c.
  • installs forwarding table entry (x,I)


x
3a
3b
2a
AS3
AS2
1a
AS1
97
Example Choosing among multiple ASes
  • now suppose AS1 learns from inter-AS protocol
    that subnet x is reachable from AS3 and from AS2.
  • to configure forwarding table, router 1d must
    determine towards which gateway it should forward
    packets for dest x.
  • this is also job of inter-AS routing protocol!



x
98
Example Choosing among multiple ASes
  • now suppose AS1 learns from inter-AS protocol
    that subnet x is reachable from AS3 and from AS2.
  • to configure forwarding table, router 1d must
    determine towards which gateway it should forward
    packets for dest x.
  • this is also job of inter-AS routing protocol!
  • hot potato routing send packet towards closest
    of two routers.

99
Chapter 4 Network Layer
  • 4. 1 Introduction
  • 4.2 Virtual circuit and datagram networks
  • 4.3 Whats inside a router
  • 4.4 IP Internet Protocol
  • Datagram format
  • IPv4 addressing
  • ICMP
  • IPv6
  • 4.5 Routing algorithms
  • Link state
  • Distance Vector
  • Hierarchical routing
  • 4.6 Routing in the Internet
  • RIP
  • OSPF
  • BGP
  • 4.7 Broadcast and multicast routing

100
Intra-AS Routing
  • also known as Interior Gateway Protocols (IGP)
  • most common Intra-AS routing protocols
  • RIP Routing Information Protocol
  • OSPF Open Shortest Path First
  • IGRP Interior Gateway Routing Protocol (Cisco
    proprietary)

101
Chapter 4 Network Layer
  • 4. 1 Introduction
  • 4.2 Virtual circuit and datagram networks
  • 4.3 Whats inside a router
  • 4.4 IP Internet Protocol
  • Datagram format
  • IPv4 addressing
  • ICMP
  • IPv6
  • 4.5 Routing algorithms
  • Link state
  • Distance Vector
  • Hierarchical routing
  • 4.6 Routing in the Internet
  • RIP
  • OSPF
  • BGP
  • 4.7 Broadcast and multicast routing

102
RIP ( Routing Information Protocol)
  • distance vector algorithm
  • included in BSD-UNIX Distribution in 1982
  • distance metric of hops (max 15 hops)

From router A to subnets
103
RIP advertisements
  • distance vectors exchanged among neighbors every
    30 sec via Response Message (also called
    advertisement)
  • each advertisement list of up to 25 destination
    subnets within AS

104
RIP Example
z
w
x
y
A
D
B
C
Destination Network Next Router Num. of
hops to dest. w A 2 y B 2
z B 7 x -- 1 . . ....
Routing/Forwarding table in D
105
RIP Example
Dest Next hops w - 1 x -
1 z C 4 . ...
Advertisement from A to D
Destination Network Next Router Num. of
hops to dest. w A 2 y B 2 z B
A 7 5 x -- 1 . . ....
Routing/Forwarding table in D
106
RIP Link Failure and Recovery
  • If no advertisement heard after 180 sec --gt
    neighbor/link declared dead
  • routes via neighbor invalidated
  • new advertisements sent to neighbors
  • neighbors in turn send out new advertisements (if
    tables changed)
  • link failure info quickly (?) propagates to
    entire net
  • poison reverse used to prevent ping-pong loops
    (infinite distance 16 hops)

107
RIP Table processing
  • RIP routing tables managed by application-level
    process called route-d (daemon)
  • advertisements sent in UDP packets, periodically
    repeated

Transprt (UDP)
Transprt (UDP)
network forwarding (IP) table
network (IP)
forwarding table
link
link
physical
physical
108
Chapter 4 Network Layer
  • 4. 1 Introduction
  • 4.2 Virtual circuit and datagram networks
  • 4.3 Whats inside a router
  • 4.4 IP Internet Protocol
  • Datagram format
  • IPv4 addressing
  • ICMP
  • IPv6
  • 4.5 Routing algorithms
  • Link state
  • Distance Vector
  • Hierarchical routing
  • 4.6 Routing in the Internet
  • RIP
  • OSPF
  • BGP
  • 4.7 Broadcast and multicast routing

109
OSPF (Open Shortest Path First)
  • open publicly available
  • uses Link State algorithm
  • LS packet dissemination
  • topology map at each node
  • route computation using Dijkstras algorithm
  • OSPF advertisement carries one entry per neighbor
    router
  • advertisements disseminated to entire AS (via
    flooding)
  • carried in OSPF messages directly over IP (rather
    than TCP or UDP

110
OSPF advanced features (not in RIP)
  • security all OSPF messages authenticated (to
    prevent malicious intrusion)
  • multiple same-cost paths allowed (only one path
    in RIP)
  • For each link, multiple cost metrics for
    different TOS (e.g., satellite link cost set
    low for best effort high for real time)
  • integrated uni- and multicast support
  • Multicast OSPF (MOSPF) uses same topology data
    base as OSPF
  • hierarchical OSPF in large domains.

111
Hierarchical OSPF
112
Hierarchical OSPF
  • two-level hierarchy local area, backbone.
  • Link-state advertisements only in area
  • each nodes has detailed area topology only know
    direction (shortest path) to nets in other areas.
  • area border routers summarize distances to
    nets in own area, advertise to other Area Border
    routers.
  • backbone routers run OSPF routing limited to
    backbone.
  • boundary routers connect to other ASs.

113
Chapter 4 Network Layer
  • 4. 1 Introduction
  • 4.2 Virtual circuit and datagram networks
  • 4.3 Whats inside a router
  • 4.4 IP Internet Protocol
  • Datagram format
  • IPv4 addressing
  • ICMP
  • IPv6
  • 4.5 Routing algorithms
  • Link state
  • Distance Vector
  • Hierarchical routing
  • 4.6 Routing in the Internet
  • RIP
  • OSPF
  • BGP
  • 4.7 Broadcast and multicast routing

114
Internet inter-AS routing BGP
  • BGP (Border Gateway Protocol) the de facto
    standard
  • BGP provides each AS a means to
  • Obtain subnet reachability information from
    neighboring ASs.
  • Propagate reachability information to all
    AS-internal routers.
  • Determine good routes to subnets based on
    reachability information and policy.
  • allows subnet to advertise its existence to rest
    of Internet I am here

115
BGP basics
  • pairs of routers (BGP peers) exchange routing
    info over semi-permanent TCP connections BGP
    sessions
  • BGP sessions need not correspond to physical
    links.
  • when AS2 advertises a prefix to AS1
  • AS2 promises it will forward datagrams towards
    that prefix.
  • AS2 can aggregate prefixes in its advertisement

eBGP session
iBGP session
3a
3b
2a
AS3
AS2
1a
AS1
116
Distributing reachability info
  • using eBGP session between 3a and 1c, AS3 sends
    prefix reachability info to AS1.
  • 1c can then use iBGP do distribute new prefix
    info to all routers in AS1
  • 1b can then re-advertise new reachability info to
    AS2 over 1b-to-2a eBGP session
  • when router learns of new prefix, it creates
    entry for prefix in its forwarding table.

eBGP session
iBGP session
3a
3b
2a
AS3
AS2
1a
AS1
117
Path attributes BGP routes
  • advertised prefix includes BGP attributes.
  • prefix attributes route
  • two important attributes
  • AS-PATH contains ASs through which prefix
    advertisement has passed e.g, AS 67, AS 17
  • NEXT-HOP indicates specific internal-AS router
    to next-hop AS. (may be multiple links from
    current AS to next-hop-AS)
  • when gateway router receives route advertisement,
    uses import policy to accept/decline.

118
BGP route selection
  • router may learn about more than 1 route to some
    prefix. Router must select route.
  • elimination rules
  • local preference value attribute policy decision
  • shortest AS-PATH
  • closest NEXT-HOP router hot potato routing
  • additional criteria

119
BGP messages
  • BGP messages exchanged using TCP.
  • BGP messages
  • OPEN opens TCP connection to peer and
    authenticates sender
  • UPDATE advertises new path (or withdraws old)
  • KEEPALIVE keeps connection alive in absence of
    UPDATES also ACKs OPEN request
  • NOTIFICATION reports errors in previous msg
    also used to close connection

120
BGP routing policy
  • A,B,C are provider networks
  • X,W,Y are customer (of provider networks)
  • X is dual-homed attached to two networks
  • X does not want to route from B via X to C
  • .. so X will not advertise to B a route to C

121
BGP routing policy (2)
  • A advertises path AW to B
  • B advertises path BAW to X
  • Should B advertise path BAW to C?
  • No way! B gets no revenue for routing CBAW
    since neither W nor C are Bs customers
  • B wants to force C to route to w via A
  • B wants to route only to/from its customers!

122
Why different Intra- and Inter-AS routing ?
  • Policy
  • Inter-AS admin wants control over how its
    traffic routed, who routes through its net.
  • Intra-AS single admin, so no policy decisions
    needed
  • Scale
  • hierarchical routing saves table size, reduced
    update traffic
  • Performance
  • Intra-AS can focus on performance
  • Inter-AS policy may dominate over performance

123
Chapter 4 Network Layer
  • 4. 1 Introduction
  • 4.2 Virtual circuit and datagram networks
  • 4.3 Whats inside a router
  • 4.4 IP Internet Protocol
  • Datagram format
  • IPv4 addressing
  • ICMP
  • IPv6
  • 4.5 Routing algorithms
  • Link state
  • Distance Vector
  • Hierarchical routing
  • 4.6 Routing in the Internet
  • RIP
  • OSPF
  • BGP
  • 4.7 Broadcast and multicast routing

124
Broadcast Routing
  • deliver packets from source to all other nodes
  • source duplication is inefficient
  • source duplication how does source determine
    recipient addresses?

125
In-network duplication
  • flooding when node receives brdcst pckt, sends
    copy to all neighbors
  • Problems cycles broadcast storm
  • controlled flooding node only brdcsts pkt if it
    hasnt brdcst same packet before
  • Node keeps track of pckt ids already brdcsted
  • Or reverse path forwarding (RPF) only forward
    pckt if it arrived on shortest path between node
    and source
  • spanning tree
  • No redundant packets received by any node

126
Spanning Tree
  • First construct a spanning tree
  • Nodes forward copies only along spanning tree

127
Spanning Tree Creation
  • Center node
  • Each node sends unicast join message to center
    node
  • Message forwarded until it arrives at a node
    already belonging to spanning tree

3
4
2
5
1
  1. Stepwise construction of spanning tree

(b) Constructed spanning tree
128
Multicast Routing Problem Statement
  • Goal find a tree (or trees) connecting routers
    having local mcast group members
  • tree not all paths between routers used
  • source-based different tree from each sender to
    rcvrs
  • shared-tree same tree used by all group members

Shared tree
129
Approaches for building mcast trees
  • Approaches
  • source-based tree one tree per source
  • shortest path trees
  • reverse path forwarding
  • group-shared tree group uses one tree
  • minimal spanning (Steiner)
  • center-based trees

we first look at basic approaches, then specific
protocols adopting these approaches
130
Shortest Path Tree
  • mcast forwarding tree tree of shortest path
    routes from source to all receivers
  • Dijkstras algorithm

S source
LEGEND
R1
R4
router with attached group member
R2
router with no attached group member
R5
link used for forwarding, i indicates order
link added by algorithm
R3
R7
R6
131
Reverse Path Forwarding
  • rely on routers knowledge of unicast shortest
    path from it to sender
  • each router has simple forwarding behavior
  • if (mcast datagram received on incoming link on
    shortest path back to center)
  • then flood datagram onto all outgoing links
  • else ignore datagram

132
Reverse Path Forwarding example
S source
LEGEND
R1
R4
router with attached group member
R2
router with no attached group member
R5
datagram will be forwarded
R3
R7
R6
datagram will not be forwarded
  • result is a source-specific reverse SPT
  • may be a bad choice with asymmetric links

133
Reverse Path Forwarding pruning
  • forwarding tree contains subtrees with no mcast
    group members
  • no need to forward datagrams down subtree
  • prune msgs sent upstream by router with no
    downstream group members

LEGEND
S source
R1
router with attached group member
R4
router with no attached group member
R2
P
P
R5
prune message
links with multicast forwarding
P
R3
R7
R6
134
Shared-Tree Steiner Tree
  • Steiner Tree minimum cost tree connecting all
    routers with attached group members
  • problem is NP-complete
  • excellent heuristics exists
  • not used in practice
  • computational complexity
  • information about entire network needed
  • monolithic rerun whenever a router needs to
    join/leave

135
Center-based trees
  • single delivery tree shared by all
  • one router identified as center of tree
  • to join
  • edge router sends unicast join-msg addressed to
    center router
  • join-msg processed by intermediate routers and
    forwarded towards center
  • join-msg either hits existing tree branch for
    this center, or arrives at center
  • path taken by join-msg becomes new branch of tree
    for this router

136
Center-based trees an example
Suppose R6 chosen as center
LEGEND
R1
router with attached group member
R4
3
router with no attached group member
R2
2
1
R5
path order in which join messages generated
R3
1
R7
R6
137
Internet Multicasting Routing DVMRP
  • DVMRP distance vector multicast routing
    protocol, RFC1075
  • flood and prune reverse path forwarding,
    source-based tree
  • RPF tree based on DVMRPs own routing tables
    constructed by communicating DVMRP routers
  • no assumptions about underlying unicast
  • initial datagram to mcast group flooded
    everywhere via RPF
  • routers not wanting group send upstream prune
    msgs

138
DVMRP continued
  • soft state DVMRP router periodically (1 min.)
    forgets branches are pruned
  • mcast data again flows down unpruned branch
  • downstream router reprune or else continue to
    receive data
  • routers can quickly regraft to tree
  • following IGMP join at leaf
  • odds and ends
  • commonly implemented
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com